Anduril's Big Contracts

Anduril has piled up major wins: reports say an enterprise‑scale U.S. Army deal could reach up to $20B, and the company separately won an $87M anti‑drone contract to deliver Lattice command‑and‑control and counter‑UAS software. Its EagleEye capability also fuses drone and sensor feeds into AR-style battlefield overlays, signaling rapid operationalization of networked sensor-to-shooter tech. ( )

The U.S. Army’s public affairs office posted the award notice on March 13, 2026, saying the service issued an enterprise contract to consolidate procurement and management of the company’s commercially available technologies. (army.mil) The vehicle is structured as a long‑term, firm‑fixed‑price enterprise agreement intended to cover commercial software, hardware, data, and sustainment under an open‑architecture approach. (armyrecognition.com) The Army‑led Joint Interagency Task Force 401 selected Anduril’s Lattice as the common tactical command‑and‑control platform for counter‑UAS operations in the first task order under that enterprise vehicle. (anduril.com) Trade reporting and the company describe Lattice as an AI‑enabled, computer‑vision and sensor‑fusion C2 layer intended to provide an interoperable “common” command picture across sensors, shooters and third‑party platforms. (imveurope.com) Anduril showcased EagleEye at AUSA 2025 as a headborne mixed‑reality kit that fuses live sensor feeds, spatial audio and mission‑planning overlays and is being pitched as Lattice‑compatible for unmanned asset control and soldier mission command. (defenseone.com) Company leadership has publicly stated Anduril’s systems are already being used operationally in the Middle East to counter Shahed‑class threats, indicating fielded employment of its sensor‑to‑shooter tooling beyond demonstrations. (aol.com)

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